The present invention relates to ammunition for firearms, in particular to the configuration and use of cartridges and casings that comprise such ammunition.
U.S. Pat. No. 9,939,236 of Drobockyi et al. and U.S. Pat. No. 10,260,847 of Viggiano et al. describe among other things a two-piece casing comprised of sleeve and a base. The sleeve, preferably made of magnetically attractive stainless steel, has a concavity for containing gunpowder and, at a first end, a mouth for holding a projectile. At the opposing second end, the sleeve has an integral nipple which is positioned within a central passageway of the base. The tip of the nipple is flared onto a shoulder within the passageway. When applied to such as 9 mm ammunition, the base may be formed of aluminum alloy and the cannelure may be in accord with well-known cannelures. Casings made in accord with the teachings of the '236 and '847 patents provide advantages over conventional forged brass casings, including lower weight, increased gunpowder volume, and in being magnetically attractive.
When, as in 7.62×51 mm NATO ammunition, casings are subject to particularly high gunpowder deflagration pressures compared to those associated with 9 mm ammunition, it has been found advantageous to fabricate the base from a high strength steel alloy. Compared to using an aluminum alloy, that has the undesirable effect of increasing weight of a casing. U.S. Pat. No. 10,697,743 of Viggiano et al. describes a casing for ammunition characterized by having a deep, curved-section cannelure, which compares with the combination of cylindrical and frusto-conical portions of a cannelure in familiar ammunition.
During extensive developmental testing of cartridges comprised of two-piece casing characterized by the above-described deep cannelure, there was occasional jamming in the firearm breech of a spent casing when certain firearms were repeat-fired at high speed. An object of the present invention is to avoid such kind of problem.
An object of the invention is to provide a casing and a cartridge for a firearm with a cannelure which both reduces weight of the article (compared to common ammunition having familiar cannelure configurations) while providing minimal propensity for jamming in automatic repeating firearms that have a high rate of firing.
In embodiments of the present invention, an ammunition cartridge has a casing that comprises a sleeve and a base. The sleeve and base may be an integral or they may be separate parts that are secured to each other as a two-piece casing. The sleeve is that portion of the casing which during use contains gunpowder and which has a mouth within which a projectile is held. The sleeve where it is contiguous with the base is typically cylindrical. The base proximal end comprises a flange shaped for being gripped by the hook of a firearm bolt, as in a conventional casing, to enable extraction from a firearm chamber of an empty casing. The casing has a cannelure that extends from the distal-facing surface of the flange to proximity of the sleeve. The cannelure is deep, compared to cannelures of conventional known ammunition, which provides a benefit of reduced weight.
A circumferential running step, which also may be called a ledge, is within the cannelure adjacent the flange. The step limits the extent to which the lip at the tip of a hook of a bolt can enter the cannelure. A step may have a cylindrical surface or, for example, a surface that lightly curves inward toward the casing length wise axis with distance from the flange. A step may be spaced apart from the flange by a groove. Preferably, a cannelure comprises a portion which runs from the step inward toward the centerline of the casing, preferably curvingly; and a contiguous portion that runs from the foregoing portion conically or curvingly outwardly to a cylindrical surface of the base having a diameter which is equal to the diameter of the sleeve. A step avoids any tendency of the tip of a firearm bolt hood to make wedging contact with a curved portion of the cannelure. In other embodiments, the cannelure may run cylindrically, and then curvingly from the step.
During use, when the bolt of a typical firearm engages with the proximal end of the casing of a cartridge, the lip at the end of a pivotable hook part of the bolt enters the cannelure but its inward motion is limited by the step with the casing cannelure. A cartridge of the present invention comprises an invention casing that has a projectile positioned in the mouth of the sleeve, a quantity of gunpowder within the sleeve, and a primer within the passageway proximal end. The objects of the invention are achieved; lighter weight deep-cannelure cartridges are fired in a repeating firearm without jamming.
The foregoing and other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent from the following description of preferred embodiments and accompanying drawings.
Reference herein to a cartridge (also sometimes called a “round”) is a reference generally to a piece of ammunition that is suitable for firing in a firearm. A cartridge comprises a casing, gunpowder in the casing, a projectile, and a primer. Well-known casings have a cannelure, a circumscribing radially-depressed region, or groove, running distally from the casing flange which is at the proximal end of the casing/cartridge. The proximal end comprises a central recess. The opposing distal end of the casing comprises the casing mouth. A cartridge ready for firing in a firearm comprises gunpowder inside the concavity of the casing, a projectile held within the mouth end, and a primer set in the central recess of the proximal end.
While most invention embodiments herein are described in connection with the two-piece casings, other embodiments of are in the form of a one-piece casing. A two-piece casing that embodies the present invention comprises a first portion called a sleeve that is shaped to hold gunpowder and to receive a projectile that closes the mouth, and a mated second portion called a base that is shaped to hold a primer. The sleeve and base portions may be separately formed and attached to each other as described in U.S. Pat. No. 9,625,241 Neugebauer, U.S. Pat. No. 9,939,236 Drobockyi et al, U.S. Pat. No. 10,260,847 Viggiano et al., and 10,697,743 Viggiano et al. The disclosures of said patents are hereby incorporated by reference, each in its entirety. In other embodiments of the present invention, the sleeve and the base portions may be integral with each other (as they are in conventional forged brass casings).
In a familiar prior art and in a present invention casing, a circumscribing groove or cannelure is located between the flange and the sleeve portion of the casing. The cannelure enables a hook on the bolt of a firearm to extract a casing from a firearm chamber after a round is fired. Understanding the process of placing a round in the chamber of a firearm and its removal after firing will be first described here, to inform about the functioning and benefit of the present invention.
With reference to
With particular reference to
When a firearm is configured for repeat or automatic firing, cartridges are magazine-fed or belt-fed into the firearm breech, within which breech the bolt translates. In a representative firing cycle, the bolt pushes a cartridge into the empty chamber of the firearm (not shown). After firing, the bolt retracts, to pull the spent casing from the chamber and back into the breech area, from which it is instantly ejected by a spring loaded pin 96 in the bolt.
Referring particularly to
In complement to the foregoing: When the bolt first touches the casing portion of a cartridge, the angled terminal end of lip 94 of hook 92 causes the free end of the hook to deflect radially outwardly. See
The minimum diameter of the contiguous curving portions 649, 651 is substantially less than the diameter of cylindrical surface 63 of a conventional prior art casing 20, such as shown in
Numerous tests were carried out by firing cartridges comprising casings 620 in an automatic repeating firearm. An occasional jam of the bolt was observed. The low rate of jam-occurrence meant that ascertaining the cause was difficult.
Jamming was eliminated by forming within the curved cannelure a feature which is called herein a step, but which might also be called a ledge. A step within a cannelure is a circumscribing surface portion of the cannelure that is configured to limit, without wedging, the radially inward travel of the lip of a hook toward the centerline of a casing when, if the step were absent, the lip of the hook could extend more deeply into an invention cannelure that has a minimum diametrical dimension that is less than which characterizes a conventional cannelure.
In use of the invention, when base 724 of a cartridge 720 is engaged with bolt 90, the radially-inward facing surface of the tip 19 of the lip 94 of hook 92 rests on step 750, thereby limiting the extent of spring-induced radial inward movement of the lip toward length axis CL.
An exemplary step for a NATO 7.62×51 mm cartridge has a diameter is about 10.3 mm and an axial length of about 0.7 mm. (The step diameter of an exemplary casing 720 may be about the same as the diameter of the cylindrical surface 63 of a conventional 7.62×51 mm round. See
With reference again to
With reference again to
The length LC of the exemplary cannelure 746 is about 3 mm, which as pointed out includes the axial length of the step. Thus, an exemplary step of 0.6 mm to 1.27 mm length will be about 20 to about 42 percent of the 3 mm length of the exemplary cannelure.
While in embodiments of the invention it is preferred that a cannelure comprise a continuously curving surface, as described in the '743 patent, approximations of a curve—for instance a series of contiguous conical surfaces—are within the scope of the invention as equivalents.
When in an embodiment of one-piece casing 1020 the smallest diameter of the cannelure cylindrical section 1063 is substantially smaller than the diameter of the cannelure of a comparable prior art casing, the material of a casing 1020 needs to be both sufficiently formable to make the sleeve portion and sufficiently strong to resist the deflagration pressures applied to the base. The feasibility of such casing 1020 depends on how large the cannelure is, what the deflagration pressures are, and what the material choices are. A two piece casing having a cannelure shaped like that shown in casing 1020 is within the scope of the present invention. An advantage of the two piece casing over a one-piece casing is that the metal of the sleeve can be chosen primarily for its formability and the metal of the base can be chosen primarily for its strength.
Another way of characterizing an embodiment of casing of the present invention is as follows: The casing comprises a central lengthwise axis, a base portion which has a flange that is at the proximal end of the casing, and a sleeve portion having a mouth shaped to receive a projectile, wherein the mouth is at the distal end of the casing. The base portion comprises a first annular side of the flange which faces proximally and surrounds a recess shaped to receive a primer. The cannelure extends in the distal direction from the opposing second annular side of the flange to vicinity of where the base portion mates with, or is integral with, the sleeve portion. The cannelure is comprised of the following surface portions circumscribing the central length axis:
The just-described casing may be a one-piece casing, or a two-piece casing comprised of a sleeve attached to a base.
An embodiment of the present invention comprises a method of firing a projectile from a cartridge in a firearm which comprises: (a) forming a cartridge comprising the casing described above, wherein a primer is positioned within the recess at the proximal end of the base portion, wherein a quantity of gunpowder is contained within the sleeve portion, and wherein a projectile is secured within the mouth of the sleeve portion; (b) pushing the cartridge into the chamber of a firearm by contacting the proximal end of the casing of the cartridge with the face of a bolt of a firearm, wherein the lip at the end of a movable hook portion of the bolt gasps said casing flange and wherein said lip contacts the step of the base of the casing; (c) by means of a firing pin of the bolt, causing the gunpowder within the sleeve portion to deflagrate and to thereby expel the projectile from the casing portion mouth; and, (d) then, pulling the casing from the chamber of the firearm by means of said bolt and hook.
The invention, with explicit and implicit variations and advantages, has been described and illustrated with respect to several embodiments. Those embodiments should be considered illustrative and not restrictive. Any use of words such as “preferred” and variations suggest a feature or combination which is desirable but which is not necessarily mandatory. Thus embodiments lacking any such preferred feature or combination may be within the scope of the claims which follow. Persons skilled in the art may make various changes in form and detail of the invention embodiments which are described, without departing from the spirit and scope of the claimed invention.
This application is a Continuation Application of co-pending U.S. Non-Provisional patent application Ser. No. 17/683,335 (Attorney Docket No. SEK0001USP2), filed on Feb. 28, 2022, which claims benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 63/191,993, filed on May 22, 2021 and which is a Continuation-In-Part of U.S. Non-Provisional patent application Ser. No. 16/916,825, filed on Jun. 30, 2020 (now U.S. Pat. No. 10,697,743), which is a Continuation-In-Part of U.S. Non-Provisional patent application Ser. No. 15/221,530, filed on Jul. 27, 2016 (now U.S. Pat. No. 10,260,847) which claimed priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 62/197,472, filed on Jul. 27, 2015. This application claims the benefit of priority of co-pending U.S. Non-Provisional patent application Ser. No. 17/683,335 (Attorney Docket No. SEK0001USP2), filed on Feb. 28, 2022 and U.S. Non-Provisional patent application Ser. No. 16/916,825, filed on Feb. 10, 2019 (now U.S. Pat. No. 10,697,743), U.S. Non-Provisional patent application Ser. No. 15/221,530, filed on Jul. 27, 2016 (now U.S. Pat. No. 10,260,847), U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 62/197,472 filed on Jul. 27, 2015 and U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 63/191,993 filed on May 22, 2021, the contents of all of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
62197472 | Jul 2015 | US | |
63191993 | May 2021 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 16383633 | Apr 2019 | US |
Child | 16916825 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 17683335 | Feb 2022 | US |
Child | 18608557 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 16916825 | Jun 2020 | US |
Child | 17683335 | US | |
Parent | 15221530 | Jul 2016 | US |
Child | 16383633 | US |